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Video: Twister hits town

DUMAS, Ark. — Much of this small town still had no electricity Monday, and an estimated 800 workers had no jobs to report to because of a weekend tornado.

Among the dozens of people injured, two young children remained in critical condition Monday.

Gov. Mike Beebe cut short his trip to the National Governors Association conference in Washington to tour the damaged area Monday. Lt. Gov. Bill Halter visited Sunday and said it looked as though "high explosives" had been set off in some homes.

The tornado struck Saturday with wind estimated at up to 207 mph.

It destroyed the Arkat Feeds pet food plant, where 125 people were employed, and heavily damaged the Federal Mogul auto supply company. It also destroyed several other businesses in the town of 5,300 people

About 2,300 customers in the Dumas area were still without power Monday, said Entergy Arkansas spokesman James Thompson.

Town water polluted
The storm also polluted the town's drinking water, and residents were told to boil it before using it.

Thompson said the utility's electric substation for the area was knocked out and it had to bring in temporary equipment. However, he said everyone able to accept electricity should have service by the end of business Tuesday.

On Sunday, Dumas resident Kevin Hill and his family pulled furniture from the rubble of their home. He said he and his family were in Pine Bluff to pick up a saw blade when the storm ripped apart their home.

"Thank God for a $5 saw blade, or we would have all been inside the house," said Hill, 42.

Dozens of buildings hitAt least 43 houses and 50 mobile homes were destroyed or damaged around Dumas, while 25 businesses were leveled and nine had major damage, a state Department of Emergency Management spokesman said.

The National Weather Service rated the Dumas tornado an F-3, with wind estimated at 158 to 207 mph. A second tornado that went from near Pendleton to near Tichnor was rated an F-1.

The tornadoes were spun off by thunderstorms that were part of the huge weather system responsible for blizzard conditions farther north that blocked highways on the Plains, grounded airline flights and blacked out hundreds of thousands of customers.

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